From: sumrall@delphi.com (L. Sumrall)
Newsgroups: alt.tv.x-files.creative
Subject: Dear Mom     Part 1
Date: 6 Oct 1995 05:04:53 GMT


I don't know if anyone else as addressed this issue, so
I thought I would fill in some of the blanks myself.
This is a Skinner story, who, as we all know, is a 
character created by Chris Carter, who's got Skinner
copyrighted, so please don't sue.

                        DEAR MOM

"Dear Mom,
  I am well. You'll be glad to know I am still in
one piece. I believe the fungus I told you about
in my last letter was not the jungle rot the others
have contracted. Tell Bryant I won't be sending him
my toes in a jar as he expected, which I'm sure will
greatly disappoint him. How is Candace doing in school?
Tell Teddy to make sure he starts wrapping the pipes.
It's never too soon to prepare for winter. We don't
have winters here. I miss snow.   
 The local villagers are preparing for an annual
festival whose name I cannot pronounce and will not
even try to write down for you. Needless to say,
it's a big wingding here. The guys are hoping we
don't get ordered out before getting to see all
the hoopla. Even if we get only one night of
festivities, it would be enough. I'm torn, though.
Part of me looks forward to a night of music, food
and dancing, while another part tells me I should be
mourning Buck.
  I wish I could have been there for his funeral. I
feel I am remiss in not being there for him, as well
as being there for his family. As I write this, Mom,
I can hear you thousands of miles away. I hear you
telling me I shouldn't feel guilty and Buck would
understand. I have to question you, though. Does
Buck understand? I don't."

  No, this wasn't going right. Walter hadn't meant
to start sounding so morose. He tried to keep his
letters light and reassuring, so his mother wouldn't
worry anymore about him than she was. The result
was his letters home were heavily self-edited. He
didn't tell them half of his experiences in Vietnam.
  He didn't tell them about the 10-year-old boy.
  He may never.
  Walter sat back and rubbed his sore eyes. He didn't
know was happening. More and more the words on the 
paper wouldn't come into focus. He worried that if 
words wouldn't focus on the paper before him, would
the enemy not focus down his sights. A man needed 
all his sense to survive in this country. 
  Besides, it was bad enough his hair was starting
to thin like his father's, now it looked as if he
would have to wear glasses.
  He put aside the unfinished letter. He would
start over again later. Pushing aside the front
flaps of the tent, he stepped outside into the
unforgiving heat. He glanced around the camp. 
It was unusually quiet and subdued. An unspoken
tenseness laid about the camp. The buzz circling
the grape vine was the head honchos were planning
something soon.
  Walter studied the unfamiliar fauna surrounding
the camp. These aren't my trees, he thought to 
himself.  What am I doing here? More and more he
had been asking himself this question. He had never
asked it before. It had been clear cut in the 
beginning, or so he believed. Uncle Sam was defending
democracy in the world, and he needed brave young
men to protect it. Walter had felt it was his 
duty to fight. His older brother hadn't.

  "Don't talk to me about duty, Walter! I know all
about duty. When Dad died, I took care of this family.
I paid the bills, I kept a roof over our heads, I
took care of Mom. That's duty! Not traipsing off to 
some God-forsaken country you probably never heard of
until now.
  Teddy was tired. He'd just gotten off third shift
from the plant, and all he had been looking forward
to was a hot meal and his bed. When he'd encountered
his younger brother in the kitchen, he had tried to
be civil by wishing Walter a happy birthday, but
as usual, their "discussion" degenerated into a fight
when it came to the war and Walter's talk of 
participating in it.
  "What about Dad," Walter shouted back. "He fought
in World War II. And Grandpa, he did a stint in the
army. I'd be carrying on an honorable Skinner
tradition."
  Teddy shook his head as he poured himself a cup
of hot coffee. "How about starting a new honorable
Skinner tradition, like going to college and making
something of yourself." He took a careful sip and
added softly, "Not being another number in a factory."
  The dart hit home. Walter reddened at the memory.
Teddy had been all set to attend college himself. The
first Skinner to do so. He'd had plans to become an
engineer, to buy a bigger house for them to live in,
to buy a car made in this decade. Then Dad had had
a sudden heart attack, and all of Teddy's dreams had
gone up in smoke, No, not up in smoke. All of his
dreams had been transferred to Walter to fulfill.
  "I'll go to college when I come back. That way
I'll qualify for the GI Bill."
  "What if you don't come back?"
  Walter started to feel an icy cold shiver down
his back, but shrugged it aside. Of course he 
would come back. He wasn't meant to die, he just
knew it.
  Teddy turned a chair backwards and straddled it,
placing his cup on the table. "If you register now
for college, the government can't draft you. By the
time you graduate, this whole crazy thing will 
probably be over and you will have come to your
senses."
  "It's too late," Walter replied softly.
  Teddy said nothing. His face said it all. "What
do you mean it's too late?"
  Under his cold gaze, Walter shifted nervously from
foot to foot. At one time he had thought of Teddy
as nothing but his brother, slightly older, but an
equal. When their father died, Teddy had seemed to
overnight inherit Dad's authoritative voice and
stance.
  "I turned 18 today, remember. I--I went down to
the recruitment office with Buck this morning. I
volunteered." There, it was out. That wasn't so
bad, was it?
  Teddy fairly leapt up from where he was sitting,
knocking the chair aside. "You bastard!" he hissed
as his thick fist lashed out and connected with
the side of Walter's mouth. Walter fell back against
the wall, bumping a pastoral picture crooked. Teddy
reached out with one hand, grabbing his brother's
shirt collar, while he cocked his fist back again.
  "Theodore!"
   "Teddy's arm froze in mid swing.
  "Walter!"
  Both boys' eyes flew to the back door where their
mother stood with a basket of clothes in her hands.
"What in God's name is going on here?"
  Teddy sheepishly dropped his hold on Walter and
shrank underneath his mother's disapproving glare.
Walter stood up and wiped the blood away from his
mouth.
  She put her basket down and placed her hands on
her ample hips. Her eyes went back and forth
between her boys. "Is anyone going to tell me
what's brought you two to blows?"
  Teddy looked back at Walter, then to his mother.
He thought frantically. Maybe there was a way
to undo this mess. Perhaps he could go down to
the recruitment office himself, maybe tell them
Walter wasn't really 18, that he was legally
under Teddy's guardianship.
  Walter hadn't meant for the news to be learned
like this, but now it was all out.
  "Mom, I've joined the Marines." He said it in
a hurry, slurring the words together so he could
get it over with.
  "Oh," was all she said. Walter had heard about
a person's face drain of all color, but he had
never seen it happen before. Until now.
  "Oh." She edged over to the kitchen table and
sank down into on of the chairs.
  Walter rushed over to her side and knelt down.
"Mom, are you okay?"
  "I'm fine." Her voice sounded dead. He looked
into her eyes. There were no tears gathering in
them, yet there was a deep sadness in her pale
blue eyes he hadn't seen there before. Not even
when she had buried her husband.
  "Mom, please." He had to swallow a hard stone
in his throat. "Please undestand. It's the right
thing to do. It's what I have to do. You'll see,
I'll make you proud. Wait until you see me in a
dress uniform. And when you go to church, you 
can brag to the other ladies about what a brave
son you have in the Marines. I'll win you medals,
Mom. Please, understand. Please."
  She reached out a hand, rough and dry from all
the work she did for her family, and cupped Walter's
cheek. She felt the stubble beneath her fingers. 
She still had problems thinking of her baby being
a man now. Today he was 18. She had baked his
favorite cake. They were waiting for Candace and
Bryant to come home from school before cutting
into it.
  Her baby was looking up at her, now, like he
used to do, his eyes so much like Frank. Walter's
eyes, his face, his whole body, was pleading with
her for understanding and acceptance. Pleading for
support.
  It was a sacrifice for her to say what he wanted
to hear. It was a sacrifice all mothers had to make
for their children.
  "I understand."              

  Walter was still daydreaming of the memory
in the kitchen when a blur swept in front of
him. "Get ready."
  He blinked. It took a second's delay as his
mind registered what had been spoken to him.
"Dresden, wait!" he called out. "What do you
mean?"
  Dresden turned around, walking backwards. "It's 
come down. We move out tonight. Get ready." He 
turned back and went down the line of tents, 
alerting the rest of the platoon.

===========================================================================

From: sumrall@delphi.com (L. Sumrall)
Newsgroups: alt.tv.x-files.creative
Subject: Dear Mom   Part II  Kinda short
Date: 12 Oct 1995 03:10:39 GMT


            Dear Mom   (Part 2 **short**)
  Walter's face itched.
  It always did when they had to put on camouflage makeup.
Tim Tucker's theory was Walter was allergic to the 
government issue, and suggested once he got back home, 
Walter switch to Avon products. Tim was a good friend.
Not a best friend, mind you. In war, best friends were
taken away too easily. It was for one's own good not
to get too attached to a fellow soldier.
  Walter was bent down low, walking behind Adams and
Sorvey, his eyes and machine gun simultaniously sweeping
back and forth. Not that he could make out anything in
the darkness. No one made a noise as they proceeded
through the jungle.
  His body was covered in a cold sweat. When on his
first patrol, Walter had refused to admit to any fear.
Now, though, he knew any soldier who wasn't the least
bit afraid, was a fool. Fear kept you alive. It kept
you awake. It kept you alert.
  He swallowed convulsively. His tongue was sticking
to the top of his dry mouth. Although he hadn't
spoken a word in hours, his mouth and throat felt
like he had eaten sand. But he couldn't afford to
reach for his canteen least he create noise when
he unscrewed the cap. The concession he made was
to remove his trigger hand from his gun to wipe
the slick sweat off his palm.
  It was the wrong moment to do so.
  There was a shout up ahead, drowned out quickly
by gunfire. Eerie shadows were cast against the 
fauna by the bright fire from the tips of machine
guns exchanging fire. The deafening noise surrounded
Walter, making him unsure of where the enemy was and
where his own people were.
  He fell to his stomach, same as those around him.
They had walked into a trap. He pressed his rifle
to his shoulder and opened fire in the general 
direction he hoped was the Cong.
  There was shouting in both languages. Shouts of
orders, shouts of pain, and shouts of pleading.
Walter tried to block the sound out. He told 
himself over and over he had heard it all before.
But above the din he was able to make out the 
voice of his commander. "Fall back!" Cohen
screamed. "Fall back!"
  "Fall back?" Adams cried back. "They're back
here, you ass hole! There's nowhere to go!"
  Somebody was wailing. "I'm hit! Oh God, I'm
hit!"
  Walter lifted his head dangerously. "Timmy?"
  "Walt, help me! I'm shot! Help me!"
  There was a moment, a single moment, where
Walter froze. A million thoughts flew through
his mind. <Where is he? How bad is it? I'll
get Sorvey to cover me. I can't do this. I
don't want to die. It's safe here. I'll 
stay here. Someone else must have heard Timmy.
Someone else will get him. But he asked for
me. It's me who has to get him.>
  "I'm coming, Timmy! Hold on!" He started to
crawl forward when his leg was grabbed. A
short cry escaped his lips. He was caught!
  "Are you stupid, white boy? Stay down." It
was Sorvey.
  "We've got to help him," he protested.
  Sorvey shook Walter's leg. "We've got to help
ourselves, first. Stay down. That's an order."
  Walter felt every muscle in his body contract.
He didn't want to be here. He wanted to throw down
his gun and say "I quit. I don't want to play 
anymore. I'm going home." He wanted Timmy to be
calling anyone's name but his.
  He shrugged off Sorvey's hand and started running
in a low crouch. A grenade exploded to his left,
raining clods down hard on his helmet. It was knocked
askew on his head over his head. He rammed it back
upright in time to see the Vietnamese soldier right
in front of his path.
  The man's expression was almost comical, and Walter
could imagine the same expression was on his own
face. 
  Like mirror images, they both stopped as their minds
understood the implications. Like mirror images, their
bodies reacted by pure fighter's instincts. Like
mirror images, they both raised the muzzles of their
weapons at each other.
  He was blinded temporarily at the synchronized fire.
The after image burned into his retina was of the
Cong soldier's mouth forming a perfect O. It was a 
silly face to be wearing at the moment of death.
Walter felt like laughing.
  Instead, he sank to his knees. He didn't have the
breath to laugh. He didn't have the breath to call
out. He struggled to suck in the gunsmoke-tainted
air, but his body wasn't responding. What was
going on? He raised his hand, seeing the action
more than feeling it, and pressed it against his
chest. He looked down but it was too dark to
see anything. The gun slid from his grasp, landing
softly on the bed of leaves with a muffled thunk.
His head began to swim, the sounds of the battle
growing distant. Distant and unimportant.

<I'm going to lay down now. I'm so tired. I'm going
to lay down. There, that's better. I'm going to lay
down here and rest. I might get up later. How strange.
I can see, but it's dark. It's night time, isn't it?
I can see in the dark. I can see the trees. I can see
the leaves on the branches, gently shifting in the wind.
I don't feel tired any more. I don't feel anything. How
nice. Look, there's Timmy. Now I know where he is. He's
holding onto his stomach. Don't worry, Timmy. I'm coming.
Can you hear me? I see Adams lying in the dirt. He's not
moving. I'm moving. I'm moving in the wind. I am the 
wind. I can see you. I can see you all. You look like tiny
ants swarming over us. I can hear you, talking so quickly
to each other. I should have learned the language. Who's
that you're standing over? He looks so uncomfortable,
wadded up like that. Straighten him out, will you? Thanks.
Hey, it's me! But I'm me. You're taking my gun. That's
okay, I don't want it anymore. You won't find anything
in my uniform. I left my letter back at the camp. I 
should have finished it. Sure, take my boots. They're in
pretty good shape. I don't care. I don't care at all.
There's nothing to care about. I wish I was home. I wonder
if I can see my house from here. Mom is probably fixing
breakfast right now. I wonder if I can smell the
biscuits baking. It's so quiet. You're not shooting at
us now. It must be over.

  It must be over....

===========================================================================

From: sumrall@delphi.com (L. Sumrall)
Newsgroups: alt.tv.x-files.creative
Subject: Dear Mom  Part 3
Date: 18 Oct 1995 02:04:27 GMT


                DEAR MOM   (Part 3)
  Walter smelled the biscuits baking. The golden sunlight was
pouring in on his bed, right into his eyes. He streteched &
yawned. It was going to be such a nice day, he could feel it.
Was there something he was supposed to do?
  He threw back the covers & swung his feet over the side.
The wooden floor was cold, as usual. Walter smiled. There
was a time when he hated to get out of bed for the simple
reason of dreading the feel of the cold floor. Now it felt
good. It felt like home.
  Home. I'm home.
  Where've I been?
  Dressing, he took the time to peer out the window. The dew
was glittering on the cut grass of their lawn. The Paulson
boy was bicycling down the street, tossing the morning paper
onto front porches. The sky was clear of any clouds & was an
intense blue. A blue Walter had never seen before. 
  He turned around when he heard his door open. Bryant.
  "Don't you ever knock?" he good-naturedly scolded.
  "I wanna show you somethin'," the eight-year-old boy smiled,
revealing the gap where his two front teeth were missing.
  Walter sat down on his bed & shoved his feet into his shoes.
"What is it?"
  "We're having show & tell today in home room, and I'm gonna
show 'em this!" He heaved up one of Mom's mason jars. It sloshed
with a yellowish-brown liquid inside. "This should beat out any
ol' lizard Mike's bringin'."
  Walter squinted at the jar. There was something floating in
the muddy liquid, but he couldn't quite make it out. "I don't
get it. What is it?"
  Bryant gave an exasperated sigh. "It's your toes, stupid!
Don't you remember? You said I could have them."
  His toes? Walter glanced down at his loafer-shod feet, then
back at the jar Bryant was holding so dearly. His toes. He
promised Bryant his toes.
  "Breakfast will be ready in 10 minutes!" The warning call 
was sounded by Mom from the kitchen below. "Anyone late to
the table will go hungry 'til lunch." Which wasn't true. Mom
would never allow one of her children to go hungry.
  Bryant tucked the jar securely under his arm & thumped down
the hallway. Walter ran his hand through his hair. That didn't
make sense. Yet...it did. Shaking his head, he cast the episode
aside. He wouldn't think about it, wouldn't let it spoil this
wonderful day.
  Buoyant again, he started down the hall, practically floating
on the aroma of fresh biscuits, sausage, toast and coffee. He
glanced to his right at the open door & stopped. He leaned 
against the door jamb as he watched Candy sitting at her
desk, writing. Her pink tongue stuck out of the side of her
mouth, a sign she was in deep thought. She looked up from 
the open book when she felt someone's presence.
  She huffed & rolled her eyes. "No thank you."
  Walter placed a hand on his chest. "What? I didn't say a
thing."
  "But you were going to. You were going to say the same 
thing Mom and Teddy said. 'Do you need any help with your
homework?' Well, I don't. I'm going to pass this math class
all by myself. It may not be with flying colors, but I
won't fail, either."
  Walter grinned. The classic Skinner stubborness. It was
too deeply bred in the genes. He had to admire his sister,
though. He knew the feeling well, wanting to accomplish
something all on his own. He would respect her wishes.
  "Will you at least let me take a look at it?"
  She pursed her lips while putting down her pencil. "Oh,
alright." Walter came over to her desk & leaned over her
shoulder. He expected the notebook paper to be covered
with math equations. Instead, it appeared to be covered
with symbols, made with black ink & a small brush, not a
pencil. The symbols didn't go left to right, but up and
down. He recognized the writing, though he didn't know
what it said. What was Candy doing writing Vietnamese
on her math homework?
  "Kids! It's on the table! Bryant's already down here
asking for seconds!"
  Before he could say anything, Candy closed the text
book & dropped it on top of the paper. "I'll finish the
rest of it on the bus," she said as she brushed past
her brother. Walter stared at the desk. He stared at the
white paper peeking out from underneath the book. Maybe
if he looked at it again, he would see it the way it was
supposed to be. Maybe this time he would see numbers 
instead. Slowly, as if reaching for a sleeping snake, he
stretched his hand out.
  "Walter."
  He jumped, jerking his hand.
  "What are you doing?" Teddy asked.
  He felt guilty, as if he had been caught in the middle
of stealing something. Lamely, he gestured to the desk.
"Candy's homework," he started.
  Teddy nodded. "Yeah, I tried to help her, too. She put me
in my place, I'll tell you," he laughed. He was dressed so
nicely in a white Oxford shirt with a dark tie & grey slacks.
His hair was neatly cut & combed back. Walter wasn't used to
seeing his brother dressed up except for church.
  "Is it Sunday?" If it was, he would have to go back to
his room and change completely.
  Teddy frowned. "No. Why do you ask?"
  "Why are you wearing your good clothes?"
  "You don't expect me to wear my work clothes to class, do
you? Those hippies might wear jeans & T-shirts to college,
but I'd rather look like somebody."
  That's right, Walter thought to himself. Teddy goes to 
school. Why would I think he goes anywhere else?
  He followed his older brother down the stairs. Dad was
standing at the front door, picking up the paper. He
shook it out to read the headlines. "Mornin' boys."
  "Morning, Dad," Teddy replied in passing.
  Walter stopped at the bottom of the steps. His father
wouldn't be joining them at the table. His idea of
breakfast was a cup of coffee, his pipe, & the sports
page. It's what he did every morning, so why didn't it
feel right this morning? What was the difference?
  "Dad?"
  Frank didn't look up from reading but he did reply
with a 'hmm?'
  Walter started turning around, his eyes going over
every inch of the living room. Nothing had changed. The
furniture was where it had always been. The pictures on
the wall were the same. The curtains were still the same
color. Everything was spotless.
  "You're not supposed to be here," Walter whispered.
  His father turned a page. "I'm not supposed to be here,"
he repeated. "Maybe you're not supposed to be here."
  Walter stepped back, suddenly feeling breathless. And
afraid. He felt the cold sweat all over his back. His ears
flooded with the sound of his heart beating & the blood
flowing through his veins. He wanted to be here. He
wanted to be home. He wanted his mother.
  "Mom." It suddenly occurred to him. She was here as
well. He stumbled into the kitchen.
  She was standing in front of the stove. She instinctively
turned when she felt Walter come up behind her. "Mom."
  She opened her arms to him with no questions asked. He
buried his face in her shoulder as she wrapped her arms around 
him. He relished the scent of her; a combination of talc 
powder, cooking grease, soap--all mom smells. "I've missed
you so much," he said, muffled against her shoulder.
  She rubbed her hand comfortingly up & down his back. "It's
alright, honey. You're home now. You're where you've wanted
to be. Look who else is here. He came by this morning just
to see you."
  Walter leaned back to look down at her. She motioned with
her head to the table behind them. He had a creeping feeling
that if he turned around & saw who was here, nothing would
be the same again.
  He released his mother & slowly, slowly pivoted around.
Bryant was squirming on his chair, his prize jar sitting in
front of his plate as he dug into his pile of scrambled eggs.
Candy was neatly buttering her toast. Teddy was pouring 
himself a cup of coffee.
  And sitting at the end of the table was Buck.
  He wasn't dressed normal like everyone else. He was wearing
green fatigues, with dog tags glinting from his chest. On his
feet were a pair of well-used combat boots. A cigarette
dangled negligently off the side of his lip.
  Walter took a step forward, his mouth open.
  Buck stood up, exhaling a puff of smoke.
  He had so many things to say to his best friend. He had no
idea where to begin. "It's good to see you." He winced at 
it's lameness.
  Buck smiled. "It's good to see you too, Walt."
  "I..." It was if a dam burst inside him. "I'm so sorry,
Buck!" Walter sobbed. "I shouldn't have talked you into
volunteering with me. I should have been there with you. I
should have been there! If I hadn't have dragged you into
this, you wouldn't be...you wouldn't be dead."
  Buck reached out a hand & squeezed Walter's shoulder. "It's
alright. You don't need to blame yourself. A man makes his
own decisions in the world. You didn't drag me into the war.
I went there on my own."
  "But you died!" Walter cried, tears temporarily blinding
him. "You died all alone, in the middle of a jungle, with
no one to hold you. I should saved you. I should have been
there for you."
  "You're wrong, Walter. I wasn't alone, just as you're
not alone now."
  Wiping the tears away with the back of his hand, Walter
looked around him. His family was there, surrounding him.
there was Mom, Bryant, Teddy, Candy...
  "Wait, they're not supposed to be here. They're not dead..."
  "But it's what you wanted, Walt. You wanted to be home,
with the people you love & love you."
  Frank shuffled into the kitchen. He walked over to the back
door & pushed aside the curtain with the stem of his pipe.
There was a strange, yet familiar, whoomping sound outside,
growing louder and closer. "Hear that, son? There's still
time."
  He walked over to his father. "Dad?"
  "Yes."
  "Am I home?"
  "You can be," Buck answered. "You can stay here with your
family & your friends. You can stay here with the things
you know & the places you know."
  "Or," his father countered, "You can go back. If you were
meant to really be here, these little slips of reality
wouldn't be happening; Bryant's jar, Candace's paper. Buck.
It can still be your choice."
  Walter looked back at his 'family' as they stood by waiting.
It could be the way it was, the way it should have been.
  "Dad, as much as I love you, I'd rather have the real thing."
  Frank smiled. "I would too, Walt." He took Walter into his
arms & gave a loving, hard hug. Walter squeezed back just as
hard.
  "I love you."
  "I love you, too. I love you all. Tell them when you get home."
  Walter reluctantly released his father. He turned & opened the
back door, stepping out not into his own back yard, but into a
strange land surrounded with towering trees. The sky was filled
with helicopters heading all in one direction. All but one, which
circled around, then began to land. The wind whipped at Walter's 
clothing, kicking up dust & grass. Ducking low, he raced to the
door of the helicopter & wrenched it open. There was no one
inside. After buckling himself in, the 'copter began to ascend.
He looked back one last time.
  I can see my house from here. 

===========================================================================

From: sumrall@delphi.com (L. Sumrall)
Newsgroups: alt.tv.x-files.creative
Subject: Dear Mom  Part 4  (Short short)
Date: 18 Oct 1995 03:52:00 GMT


            DEAR MOM   (Part 4 now this one should be short)

  He went up and up and up, floating, hovering over the
battle field. The air was filled with the whoomping sound
of helicopters. He could see his body from up here. There
were men swarming over the fallen platoon. White men, not
natives. American troops. Some wore a white band with a
red cross on their arms. Two of these men were standing 
over his body.
  "He's dead," one of them said.
  "Zip him up."
  The first man bent over & grabbed the zipper of the black
bag, slowly pulling it up. The bag was almost closed over
Walter's face.
  *Noooo! I'm too late!*
  "Palmer!"
  The man zipping the body bag stopped & looked up at the
third man stomping over to them. "What are you doing?"
  "He's dead, sir. I'm packing him off."
  "I've been watching you, Palmer. I'm tired of your half-
assed work. Did you even check the man for a pulse and
resperation?"
  Palmer gestured to the pale face of Walter sticking out
of the bag. "Sir, he's got a massive chest wound & they've
all been lying out here in the open for hours. He's dead.
He's deader than dead."
  *No I'm not*
  "Did you check?" the man repeated.
  Palmer glanced over at his confederate, who was staring
down at the tips of his boot.
  Cursing under his breath, the third man pushed Palmer
aside & unzipped the bag. Leaning down over the fallen
soldier, he listened long & closely as he pressed two
fingers against the man's neck. Minutes passed, yet the
man never moved.
  *Don't give up on me*
  "Don't give up on me, soldier," he whispered. He turned
his head towards the two men. "Get a stretcher over here."
  "Sir?"
  "I said get a stretcher over here, now! And see if the
chopper is ready to move out again. This man is alive!"

===========================================================================

From: sumrall@delphi.com (L. Sumrall)
Newsgroups: alt.tv.x-files.creative
Subject: Dear Mom  (The End)
Date: 23 Oct 1995 01:35:55 GMT


                DEAR MOM  (Part 5--the end)
  "Walter."
  The voice was feminine, drawing him up, out of the darkness
of sleep. He smelled food as well.
  "Walter, wake up."
  His eyelids fluttered as he wearily cracked his eyes open.
  "It's time for lunch."
  Nurse Wagner was standing over his bed, holding a tray with
a steaming bowl of soup on it. Walter smiled weakly at her.
"I didn't mean to fall asleep. I was writing a letter home."
He moved gingerly to put the paper & pen aside without 
stretching the stitches covering his chest. He had meant to
write to the family a true letter, one that didnt hide the
truth about himself & the war. He was going to tell Mom about
his injury as honest & gently as he could. He was going to
tell Tedyy he had been right all along. He was going to tell
his younger siblings how much he missed them & loved them.
But he couldn't get past the salutation:

        Dear Mom
  
  Janet Wagner bent over to put the tray in place. Her soft, red hair
brushed against Walter's face. It smelled so clean & fresh. He was
glad the tray was sitting over his lap. He tried not tbe like the
other soldiers in the rd, openly & secretly lusting over the young
army nurse. Walter had a special feeling for Janet. He had come to the
hospital in Saigon in a deep coma. For two weeks Janet continually
talked to the unconscious man, calling out for him to wake up, wake
up, wake up. Two weeks later, he did. The first sight he beheld was
theiminutive woman smiling down at hi The first sensation he had
(aside from the pain of his chest wound) was of her holding his
hand. The first sound he heard outside of his delirium was Janet
saying "Welcome back, Walter."
  As he set the unfinished letter on the table beside his
bed, he spotted the glint of light shinning off his 
Purple Heart. He picked it up & smiled sadly. *I'll win
you medals, Mom*
  "It doesn't look like you got very far," Janet commented,
looking at the paper. "Do you want me to write for you?"
  He shook his head slightly. "It's not that it tires me out
to write. I simply don't know what--I don't know how to tell
them what I need to tell them."
  She tucked a napkin up under his chin. "How about telling
your family the good news?"
  "What good news?"
  Janet paused as she was bringing up a spoonful of soup.
"Hasn't Dr. Morgan talked to you today? No? Well then,
I'll be the one to tell you. I've seen your report on his
desk. When you regain enough strength  travel, you'll
be transferred to the hospital in San Francisco to recover.
You'll be spending the rest of your tour of duty in the City
By The Bay. It's a beautiful city. Have you ever been there?"
  There was a sudden clatter of falling silverware. Janet
looked back over her shoulder at another soldier on the other
side of the room. "I'll be right there." She dabbed at a bit
of soup on Walter's chin. "Can you finish your lunch by
yourself?"
  "Yes." But when Janet left his side, Walter pushed the bowl
aside on the tray so he would have room. He reached for the
pen & paper by his side. He knew now what to say.

    Dear Mom,

    I'm coming home...
  
